Paleonet: shark teeth

Mike Everhart mike at oceansofkansas.com
Fri Apr 17 19:34:31 UTC 2009


Kevin,
You can start here:
http://www.oceansofkansas.com/KS-sharks.html

The Greenhorn also occurs in Kansas...

... I would suggest that you look up this paper:

*Shimada, K. and Martin, D.J. 2008. Fossil fishes from the basal 
Greenhorn Limestone (Upper Cretaceous, Late Cenomanian) in Russell 
County, Kansas. **pp.  89-103 in Farley G. H. and Choate, J.R. (eds.), 
Unlocking the Unknown; Papers Honoring Dr. Richard Zakrzewski,  Fort 
Hays Studies, Special Issue No. 2, 153 p., Fort Hays State University, 
Hays, KS.*

Regards,

Mike Everhart
Adjunct Curator of Paleontology
Sternberg Museum of Natural History
Fort Hays State University, Hays, KS
www.oceansofkansas.com <http://www.oceansofkansas.com>

> I am going to be starting a project identifing fossil shark teeth from 
> a greenhorn formation in Northwest Iowa.  I was wondering if anybody 
> has any ideas of where to look to find a good classification key.
> Kevin
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